Brewing Mesopotamian Beer - 4,000 Years Old

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Tasting History with Max Miller

Tasting History with Max Miller

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Subtitles: Jose Mendoza | IG @worldagainstjose
PHOTO CREDITS
Nuruk: By Eugene Kim - www.flickr.com/photos/eekim/5..., CC BY 2.0, commons.wikimedia.org/w/index...
Enkidu: By Osama Shukir Muhammed Amin FRCP(Glasg) - Own work, CC BY-SA 4.0, commons.wikimedia.org/w/index...
Code of Hammurabi: By Mbzt - Own work, CC BY 3.0, commons.wikimedia.org/w/index...
#tastinghistory #mesopotamia #beer

КОМЕНТАРІ: 4 200
@TastingHistory
@TastingHistory Рік тому
This video wraps up 2022. 🍻 Let me know what you want to see in 2023 Pre-order the TASTING HISTORY COOKBOOK: amzn.to/3NKTSaM
@lairdcummings9092
@lairdcummings9092 Рік тому
Time travel via recipe!
@julietsmith5925
@julietsmith5925 Рік тому
Caudle.
@sonipitts
@sonipitts Рік тому
One note about the sweetness - the yeast will continue to eat sugar and make alcohol until they either run out of sugar to eat or make so much alcohol they kill themselves off (yet another species that didn't learn the lesson of Enki's foibles). So if you want a sweeter beer (or mead, or cider) you generally have to "back-sweeten" the brew when you're ready to drink. But this will refeed the yeasties and create even more alcohol if allowed to sit. So do this at the point of serving unless you, too, wish to wake up one day to find you've given away all the gifts of civilization to a sneaky family member.
@medb1996
@medb1996 Рік тому
How 'bout comanche Roasted Grasshoppers?
@cosh5
@cosh5 Рік тому
Hindle wakes?
@Alex_Bert_
@Alex_Bert_ Рік тому
Man, you made me remember about that trip I made in Nippur in 2532 B.C.E. with my servants and my lady Ninmah, and the beer served there was absolutely delicious! Cheers to you! 🍺🍺
@zeideerskine3462
@zeideerskine3462 Рік тому
The trick is to have the prettiest young woman who is not currently pregnant or nursing spit in the vat to kick off the second fermentation. Then your beer shall be clear and sparkling.
@Kelvin_Foo
@Kelvin_Foo Рік тому
Hope the beer wasn't served in cups provided by Ea-Nasir, I've heard that man is a scoundrel of the highest order.
@scaper8
@scaper8 Рік тому
Dude, I was there for that party! It was epic! We were drinking fresh sheep milk spiked with raw honey too! Good times. Gooood times.
@gardnerhill9073
@gardnerhill9073 Рік тому
Would have been a nicer party if that asshole Ea-Nasir hadn't been bitching about his freaking copper shipment the whole time.
@thesmatorexperience
@thesmatorexperience Рік тому
Good times good times
@CipherVoheim
@CipherVoheim Рік тому
The fact there is an archeologist out there who's sole motivation in his field is learning about beer makes my alcoholic brain very happy
@TastingHistory
@TastingHistory Рік тому
Right!?
@lairdcummings9092
@lairdcummings9092 Рік тому
Dogfish Head Brewery makes "Midas Touch" beer, based on archaeological discovery from said Monarch's palace. That's right: King Midas's beer lives on, thanks to academic delving!
@godsowndrunk1118
@godsowndrunk1118 Рік тому
I'll drink to that...🍺
@davidreynolds8865
@davidreynolds8865 Рік тому
look up the writer Mark Forsyth, he has a book called "a short history or drunkenness".
@ab-ul1yz
@ab-ul1yz Рік тому
@@lairdcummings9092 But the cereals used back then still exist today? They didn't evolve or something?
@lugal_pcz
@lugal_pcz Рік тому
As part of the team that just discovered a Sumerian tavern in southern Iraq, I love this video. Thanks so much!
@itsyaboi6628
@itsyaboi6628 Рік тому
That sounds really cool! Are there any particular things you noticed?
@thecursed01
@thecursed01 Рік тому
Fancy way of saying you got drunk in a bar on vacation XD
@aceroadholder2185
@aceroadholder2185 Рік тому
I guess the Pabst Blue Ribbon bas-relief on the wall was a dead give away.
@alfatejpblind6498
@alfatejpblind6498 Рік тому
Bless you iraqi archeologists, I can’t imagine how difficult and hard it must be to see so many of your country’s invaluable artefacts and treasures be destroyed after the american invasion
@thecursed01
@thecursed01 Рік тому
@@alfatejpblind6498 don't forget the stuff Isis blew up intentionally
@BlackCatRedScarf
@BlackCatRedScarf Рік тому
You know things got serious when Max begins to rap in mesopotamian. 😂
@narveenaryaputri9759
@narveenaryaputri9759 Рік тому
😅
@paveantelic7876
@paveantelic7876 10 місяців тому
ud reaaa moment
@Nikki-tx6kh
@Nikki-tx6kh 9 місяців тому
I know this music band from Moldova, and I swear to you that could pass for one of their songs, easily. I could actually see them perform it.
@horrorspirit
@horrorspirit 9 місяців тому
@@Nikki-tx6kh what band?
@Nikki-tx6kh
@Nikki-tx6kh 9 місяців тому
@@horrorspirit Zdob si Zdub. I know them because they've the Moldovan entry in Eurovision three times
@lairdcummings9092
@lairdcummings9092 Рік тому
Beer is proof that Zoroaster loves us, and wants us to be happy.
@DrIgnacious
@DrIgnacious Рік тому
You misspelled Arceus
@SimuLord
@SimuLord Рік тому
From Bacchus to the future.
@nickking8994
@nickking8994 Рік тому
Truth!
@WowUrFcknHxC
@WowUrFcknHxC Рік тому
You misspelled Ahriman 😀 the dark chaos loves us. 😈
@typo4859
@typo4859 Рік тому
*Ahuramazda
@antonv7329
@antonv7329 Рік тому
I'm an archaeologist (who is currently drinking some beer) and I wrote my undergraduate thesis on alcohol in Neolithic Europe. If you haven't read an of Dr. Patrick McGovern's work, I highly suggest "Uncorking the Past"! He covers a great breadth of ancient brews and brewing technologies. Love your videos, excited to check out your other brewing adventures!
@TastingHistory
@TastingHistory Рік тому
Thanks for the reco Anton
@neclark08
@neclark08 Рік тому
...may I pose you a question re; Ancient Brewskies, Anton ? How do the quantities- & qualities of the proteins & other nutrients of ancient 'Liquid Breads' compare to their oven-baked competitors ?
@Fuchsia_tude
@Fuchsia_tude Рік тому
@@neclark08 Also, how much of the calories of ancient people came from beer? Does it seem true that most people derived most of their daily energy from (barely alcoholic) beer and beer porridge rather than solid baked bread?
@derekfrost8991
@derekfrost8991 Рік тому
@@neclark08 you also have different sugars like dextrin which sourdough can ferment because it is a wild culture but modern yeasts can't. There are many factors.. 🙂
@chadkline4268
@chadkline4268 Рік тому
I can say that I did a 6 week experiment drinking 1L of unfiltered unbottled homebrew right out of the primary every morning and 1L at night. And no other food. And other than sleeping a bit more, I felt fine, and even gained weight. I think we don't have the full facts on the nutrition of natural unprocessed brews. It is possible to literally live off the stuff for extended periods of time.
@BobHooker
@BobHooker Рік тому
As an experienced brewer I find that anything at hand goes into beer: coffee, dark chocolate, dates, and just about any herb I find in the garden, so I imagine they probably did the same. Over the centuries, and with things passed from person to person, they would have tired just about everything. What you are making hear seems like how Slavic Kvas is made, though the added yeast and time turn it to beer. Once again love the show, nice to see somebody is even more obsessed with culinary restoration than myself.
@narveenaryaputri9759
@narveenaryaputri9759 Рік тому
I want to read more of your comments and information. This is a wonderful discovery. If you have the time, maybe a commentary video about your experiences !!!
@hicknopunk
@hicknopunk 11 місяців тому
I had Kvas this last new years eve. It's alright.
@seffffee1333
@seffffee1333 5 місяців тому
Ancient Egyptians made psychedelic Beers lol
@rubiconnn
@rubiconnn 3 місяці тому
I wish there were more beers without hops added.
@dannygarland6366
@dannygarland6366 Рік тому
One reason it may not seem "sweet" is because sugar is so ubiquitous in our modern cooking that our palates become numb to it. Back during those times, they probably would pick up on a sweetness level that we wouldn't notice. I know whenever I go to Europe and come back home, regular American bread seems like cake.
@jhutfre4855
@jhutfre4855 11 місяців тому
yep, sugar is a big disease and a problem of today... It numbs all other tastes in reality, when you give up sugar (as I did :)) all other food, for instance, vegetabiles and bread, start to taste better, also fruit and we see here, beer.
@tulipalll
@tulipalll 11 місяців тому
Agreed. I don't know why our bread here in the u.s. has to be so airy and full of sugar
@armintor2826
@armintor2826 11 місяців тому
Isnt american bread by technicality not considered bread by certain European standards? I recall being told that Subway bread is not legally bread in Ireland due to it's sugar content
@chloeedmund4350
@chloeedmund4350 10 місяців тому
I started cutting back on sugar a few years ago and now the sweetness in vegetables like carrots stand out to me.
@jhutfre4855
@jhutfre4855 10 місяців тому
@@chloeedmund4350 Don't want to go to far here, but acnes will also eventually disappear, and teeth remain healthy.
@FrikInCasualMode
@FrikInCasualMode Рік тому
Hell yeah! I was waiting for this episode for ages! Beer was huge thing in early civilizations. You can't read five sentences translated from ancient languages without someone mentioning beer. Workers were paid in beer for work done. Soldiers were given beer as part of food rations. Entire villages were founded to produce beer for a temple or palace. And yes, they paid taxes in beer. And gave beer as offering to gods. Only when wine-making really took off, it managed to overcome the beer in importance.
@TastingHistory
@TastingHistory Рік тому
Better late than never 😅
@julietsmith5925
@julietsmith5925 Рік тому
Makes sense given beer's only competition was mead and potentially hard cider.
@FrikInCasualMode
@FrikInCasualMode Рік тому
@@TastingHistory Eh, I don't begrudge you taking your time. Together with my dad, we are making wine at home every each year. Even with all the guides, ready yeast strains and special equipment it's still a hit-or-miss process. Never tried to make beer, but I would fully expect my attempts to produce even patchier results that wine does. As for the straining process used by Sumerians, it is quite possible they used to place another filter inside that bowl with big holes. It could be something as simple as folded linen cloth, or maybe special, tightly woven reed basket? Since it would be made from organic material, it simply would not survive to our times.
@darthplagueis13
@darthplagueis13 Рік тому
@@julietsmith5925 Well, there's probably always been *some* kind of wine. After all, it pretty much makes itself if you just let some sweet juice ferment. Hard cider is essentially just apple wine which is consumed before it has fully fermented so it's still sweet and slightly effervescent. Odds are that beer was more popular early on because the people at the time appreciated fruit primarily as a sweet treat, so they would probably would have been hesitant to let perfectly good fruit go off, not to mention that wine is a bit of an acquired taste and the first people to make it might just have dumped it because it was so sour and they thought they could get ill from drinking it (mind you, they well could. It's not unusual to upset your stomach with young wine and whilst catching a bit of diarrhea from an upset stomach today is rather inconvenient, to ancient peoples it would have been much more severe). My personal guess is that wine started becoming truly popular when people started using fruit juice as a sweetener and became more accustomed to having it go off.
@joselopez-kx3sm
@joselopez-kx3sm Рік тому
beer and bread are the two earliest inventions of the ancient world.
@kirstenpaff8946
@kirstenpaff8946 Рік тому
We inhabit a world of standardized weights, machine tooling, and 3D printing. It is easy to forget that in the past, there was little to no standardization and every person had their own way of making things. Every family in ancient Mesopotamia probably had their own way of making beer. The types of beer were more general categories than standard recipes. Depending on region and time period, the same name could possibly even refer to different beers.
@TheWinjin
@TheWinjin Рік тому
That's a very important note! I think we get a lot of this in "family passed recipes" where every recipe is like hand-written and more so, eyeballed! Like, a lot of Slavic families have their own ways of preparing Borscht or Pelmeni or well anything really. It's rarely "half a cup of this and 243 grams of that" it's always more like eyeball it, eyeball that, you should feel it in your heart how much of this or that you need. And it comes more from preparing something with your parents for years even before you grew up, I think.
@grantbishop1961
@grantbishop1961 Рік тому
Except the Annunaki had more advanced technology then we even use today and most of our technology was reversed engineered from Elder tech. How do you think we progressed so much in under 100 years from 1950's to 2023. Why the navy have Hybrid Ariel Underwater Crafts capable of interplanetary travel? Google it, HAUCs, Navy Patent.
@deusvult6920
@deusvult6920 Рік тому
It's important to note, standardized measurements are older than Rome
@whattheheck8979
@whattheheck8979 8 місяців тому
​@@grantbishop1961 Please research instead of spreading misinformation, especially on videos relating to history. The expired patent in question is made by Salvatore Pais: "Starting in 2015, he began filing patent applications on behalf of his employers with futuristic-sounding names suggesting potential military and energy-producing applications. No working prototype of any of these concepts was ever developed. These attracted attention, as well as speculation that they may be disinformation intended to mislead the United States' strategic adversaries about the direction of United States defense research." These projects, like the Army's "Stargate Project" (about gathering intelligence via out-of-body experiences) are similar, meant to mislead foreign intelligence agencies that may be spying by mixing in legitimate documents with ones like these. Funnily enough, the Navy-created private TOR browser uses this exact method to conceal information. Basically, legitimate military documents are the needles in the haysack full of illegitimate documents, it's the best way for anonymity and security.
@jimfortnite7810
@jimfortnite7810 6 місяців тому
@@grantbishop1961take your meds
@chicobicalho5621
@chicobicalho5621 Рік тому
Considering Sumarians themselves probably never made beer exactly like each other, and there were probably endless variations 4,000 years ago, this beer you made is likely to be similar to a version or another from the past.
@stephaniewilson3955
@stephaniewilson3955 Рік тому
Bread and beer are basically the same, using grain and yeast. It is just that one is dry and the other liquid. The women were usually responsible for preparing both. They usually did it daily as it did go off in a couple of days. One reason hops got used later was as a preservative that enabled you to keep the beer longer. In Medieval times there was beer (the first brewing) that was given to the men then small beer (a second brewing from the same wort) that was for women and children. Remember! Water could be polluted so beer was safer well into the 19th Century.
@BetterWorse-ge6ci
@BetterWorse-ge6ci 4 місяці тому
No. Look up actual 'beer', gruit. It didn't contain hops, hops are estrogenic and are exceedingly unhealthy.
@thethoughtemporium
@thethoughtemporium Рік тому
In terms of the date syrup, they likely would have added way more as you realized near the end. I'm always surprised by just how much sugar goes into making alcohol. No matter how many brews I've done, it's always more than it seems like it needs, yet that's just the math of the yeasts metabolism. The fizz is because it's still fermenting. If you bottle it the pressure builds up and it'll be actually properly carbonated when served, but I don't think the Sumerians had vessels that could take that sort of pressure, least not ones that were readily available, so they almost certainly wouldn't have done that. When making beer even today, you'd typically decant the upper liquid once it's had a bit to settle which will remove most of the crud at the bottom. The flavor changes a lot based on how well you remove the junk at the bottom as it's the source of a lot of "off" tastes. Anyway, great video! loved the history.
@cademcclure2147
@cademcclure2147 Рік тому
Bro where have you been, it’s been 10 months please come back to us
@cdreid9999
@cdreid9999 Рік тому
they had complex pottery. And remember we only find what survived thousands of years in places we happened to dog. They may have used reeds or twine or cloth to seal jars
@wirelessone2986
@wirelessone2986 Рік тому
They may have stirred it with straws and used the stuff at the bottom and at the top as caloric intake..beer soup..I heard that the Germans take in 1/3 of their calories from beer,maybe so did the poeple who drank this recipe.
@jakeg3733
@jakeg3733 Рік тому
Didn't they add urine to their beers? I doubt any of these ancient brews were particularly palatable
@grantbishop1961
@grantbishop1961 Рік тому
​@@jakeg3733they added silver and silver coins because they have as an antimicrobial, antibacterial and antiviral properties.
@adambarron4015
@adambarron4015 Рік тому
A mead homebrewer here, with minor beer experience: the poem is a stupidly detailed recipe, if you can read it. Mix grains, aromatics, and excess sugar. Bake dry at malting temperatures. Rehydrate with the guarding dogs (aka yeast to stop corrupting bacteria (potentate)) at a warm temperature for one day. The mash is thus spread to cool and dry on mats. Mix into a vat which makes a pleasant sound (aka thin walled container to transfer the desert heat) with a wort of fruit juice and honey (aka melomel). Using modern methods, the fermentation would proceed for 2 weeks before being poured off the yeast and sediment into a collector vat (aka secondary fermentation). The statement of the onrush of the Tigris and Euphrates could refer to blending different batches for a consistent flavor or diluting a strong beer into water. Regardless of my accuracy, please, let the next Fermenting History be a Pulque recipe. Pulque is a unique alcoholic beverage that uses agave nectar as the primary fermenting sugar and often Lactobaccilus to produce a sour "beer".
@khuntasaurus88
@khuntasaurus88 Рік тому
Wow good to have a professional perspective. I also thought that Max veered a bit off the recipe by following archaeological leads over the written part. Thanks for the insight!
@petergray7576
@petergray7576 Рік тому
Pulque is a nice idea. But you can't do that episode without mentioning the myth of Quetzalcoatl and his..... unfortunate indiscretion.... with his sister..... after getting inebriated on pulque. So maybe somewhat NSFW?
@eddavanleemputten9232
@eddavanleemputten9232 Рік тому
Fellow mead, (fruit)wines and cider maker here with equally limited beer making experience. I was thinking along the same lines. 😊
@melmoomlem7321
@melmoomlem7321 Рік тому
@@petergray7576 implied incest can be ignored, ancient Egyptians married their siblings and no one shies away from mentioning that.
@vatiti9573
@vatiti9573 Рік тому
Homebrewer of BEERS here (well, I have done only six batches to this day, but I have now a bit of experience on it, my first one was too light even for a light beer and visibly got infected by lactobacillus, but the next five came out frankly good and had no infections) ! I must admit that you pretty much said everything, that Ninkasi's hymn says much more than Max thought to an experienced homebrewer (no criticism against him though, he did great especially given the fact it was probably the first time he brewed beer).
@debbiegilmour6171
@debbiegilmour6171 Рік тому
I think Hello Fresh should write their recipes in ancient Sumarian from now on.
@DevoteeofThunor
@DevoteeofThunor 2 місяці тому
Sumerian*
@rogerkulpnik
@rogerkulpnik Рік тому
When soaking (mashing) the slightly roasted ground grain, barley has the most enzymes present which convert starches into sugars. So wheat beer for for example always includes some barley. Dried fruit is a common ingredient in mead even to modern day, because it accelerates the growth of yeast, has yeast on it, and also has sugar of course. In northern europe, fermenting beer was stirred occasionally with deer horns or brooms made of pine trees. Pine could impart a flavor, but yeast would stick to it, and when dried, the stirring device, could be reused to inoculate the next batch of beer with yeast. Always wondered if the pine cones and the mysterious ancient hand-bags were actually hopps and a bucket of beer.
@miketacos9034
@miketacos9034 Рік тому
Can’t believe Max has been fermenting this beer for thousands of years straight.
@Yolo_Swagins
@Yolo_Swagins 11 місяців тому
Yep, hes werry dedicated to bring quality content to us.
@marcuswillbrandt5901
@marcuswillbrandt5901 11 місяців тому
And it's still fermenting.
@schleybailey
@schleybailey 10 місяців тому
and it still aint done lol
@darthdogeyt3260
@darthdogeyt3260 7 місяців тому
until the end of time
@rebjorn79
@rebjorn79 4 місяці тому
He didn't actually do that. Max isn't thousands of years old.
@mattlevault5140
@mattlevault5140 Рік тому
Terrific content and well researched, as always! I used to brew beer. You didn't get the sweetness of the date syrup because the yeast consumed the sugar enzymes to create the alcohol and carbon dioxide (and vitamin B12). That's also why you got that hint of effervescence. I was expecting the hardtack clip among all the bread information... That never gets old! Happy New Year!
@dnoname8108
@dnoname8108 Рік тому
I brew beer currently and I was just about to say the same thing. If you add sugar, yeast will eat it all unless the alcohol content gets too high to kill the yeast, unless you add invert sugar or kill all the yeast and backsweeten. And yes, the yeast are still doing their thing in this concoction so they are still making co2, so it is kinda carbonated just very very lightly. to my knowledge, almost all beer was bottle or keg conditioned to make it carbonated in the past. This means that the still living yeast are given a little more food and sealed in an airtight container, which means the co2 produced had nowhere to go but back into the beer, making it carbonated.
@ragnkja
@ragnkja Рік тому
@@dnoname8108 A sealed container is necessary if you want full-on carbonation rather than just a hint of effervescence, because you need something that can contain the pressure.
@dnoname8108
@dnoname8108 Рік тому
@@ragnkja Didn't I say "airtight container"?
@Chevsilverado
@Chevsilverado Рік тому
@@dnoname8108 Even if it’s not in a sealed container and even if the yeast is dead the liquid can hold a certain amount of dissolved co2 which is why wine makers tend to degass the wine by stirring. It’s not necessarily caused by still alive yeast. Also, brewing yeasts can be made to “leave a bit of sugar on the table” so even if you don’t run them to death it’ll not be totally dry. Still pretty dry but not entirely.
@dnoname8108
@dnoname8108 Рік тому
@@Chevsilverado Sure, but I was talking about how they used to carbonate it to a point we would recognize as a carbonation, so for like 400 years of bottle conditioning. I would love to see something about the dissolved co2 such as how long after all the yeast are dead and how much co2. and in this case, he had live yeast in this vessel. Sure, if you use less alcohol tolerant yeast and you make it high enough proof, you can have it go a bit more sweet. You can also kill or deactivate the yeast through heat, cold or chemicals. Though I haven't seen that in the beer homebrew scene. It tends to be wine makers from what I have seen and usually a lot of places backsweeten after they have killed off the yeast because it is easier to add the right amount of sugar back in after all the yeast is dead. unless you use undigestable sugars for the yeast, as to not restart their lifecycle.
@smile-tl9in
@smile-tl9in Рік тому
About the beer that was given to workers. It wasn't just for fun. The beer had a high caloric value, and while it wasn't strong the alchool content made sure it didn't go bad (or at least that form of beer didn't), making it a decent foodstuff with a long shelf life.
@tamaspej1378
@tamaspej1378 10 днів тому
even today beer is a go to drink to any construction worker. I think it just works better then any other liquid. Better for our gut.
@John_Fugazzi
@John_Fugazzi 11 місяців тому
I think Max is one of the few people who could say, "I know a lot of people who make this" when talking about a 5,000 year old Sumerian beer recipe.
@nextcaesargaming5469
@nextcaesargaming5469 Рік тому
This beer is actually very similar to kvass. Given how much I enjoy kvass, I think I'll enjoy Mesopotamian beer.
@professornuke7562
@professornuke7562 Рік тому
I thought the same thing.
@Giganfan2k1
@Giganfan2k1 Рік тому
I love K'vass.
@DonnaBarrHerself
@DonnaBarrHerself Рік тому
Love Klass. I make a light, effervescent version, with sultanas.
@varangjar1544
@varangjar1544 Рік тому
I grew up in homemade kvass. Considering what a history nerd I am, this is an obvious transition to make))
@strawberryhellcat4738
@strawberryhellcat4738 Рік тому
Big kvass fan here too! My favorite is a sweet beet version I found on the Peter's Food Adventures channel.
@estanislaukalashnikov2306
@estanislaukalashnikov2306 Рік тому
Using bread in the beer reminds me Slavic kwas. In kwas the yeast is added separately, as the bread is toasted until really dark (so no live yeast there), but I could picture backtracking all the way to Mesopotamian beer, just like barszcz vs. tuh'u.
@lesslighter
@lesslighter Рік тому
It could also be that you can add mollasses when baking dark rye bread the bread in Kvass is not necessarily baked dark but yeah
@JohnLeePettimoreIII
@JohnLeePettimoreIII Рік тому
this vi-jay-o about making Kvass was recently released by another cooking channel i watch. ukposts.info/have/v-deo/pKBjl4pub4qSpoE.html
@annalieff-saxby568
@annalieff-saxby568 Рік тому
Just FYI, Harry Flashman described kvass as "It's thick, it's black, and it makes you drunk".
@TrueMentorGuidingMoonlight
@TrueMentorGuidingMoonlight Рік тому
I love to have kvass and shashlik in the summer
@gregorypkampwirth8852
@gregorypkampwirth8852 Рік тому
Na zdrowie panu!! 🇵🇱🍻🍺
@dougneon9550
@dougneon9550 Рік тому
When the ancient sumerian demon is actually pretty chill and he even knows how to make a good brew
@maiiabakhova2474
@maiiabakhova2474 7 місяців тому
About twice baked: some already mentioned Slavic kvas, a less alcoholic sibling of beer. Ingredients for it vary, too, although one of frequent ones are pieces of a rye bread, dried in oven. So one can say that they were baked two times. It is done with a stale bread to keep it from spoiling for other usage. For example, to add to a sponge. In US you do a sponge with flour, but it could be done with a stale sourdough bread pieces as well.
@demetriusjohnson6969
@demetriusjohnson6969 Рік тому
Max has the God of Pokemon in a jar. I love it 😂😂😂
@crickett3536
@crickett3536 Рік тому
Arceus, it is you who handles the dough 🤣
@GardenData61371
@GardenData61371 Рік тому
Oh no... *gets PTSD*
@coldtoast7426
@coldtoast7426 Рік тому
@@GardenData61371 nonononononononnononononno (but i thought the same thing
@JTSquirrel
@JTSquirrel Рік тому
@@GardenData61371 POT. IT'S IN A POT 😭
@steventhompson5554
@steventhompson5554 Рік тому
Ahh, that’s who that is. I was looking for Pikachu again
@DoomedPaladin
@DoomedPaladin Рік тому
I had the pleasure of writing the 'Beer' cleric domain (Pathfinder 1e, since converted to 5e DnD) for Kobold Press' Midgard campaign setting and its Beer Goddess Ninkash. I'd always wondered where that Goddess's name came from, but thanks to you Max, now I know. Beautiful.
@TakeWalker
@TakeWalker Рік тому
oh my god, I need to play a beer cleric now :D
@fedra76it
@fedra76it Рік тому
How cool is that?! Being a Pathfinder and 5e-DnD player, it's nice to "meet" one of the source material authors.
@DoomedPaladin
@DoomedPaladin Рік тому
@@TakeWalker you can find the domain in the Midgard Campaign Setting book (for Pathfinder) and the World Book (for 5e).
@DoomedPaladin
@DoomedPaladin Рік тому
@@fedra76it Kobold Press authors are especially easy to interact with online. We're _very_ engaged with our community, although, it IS mostly on Facebook.
@lonelystrategos
@lonelystrategos Рік тому
Beer domain cleric? As a German, I can attest to the historical accuracy of that. The oldest monastery in Germany is home to what may be the oldest brewery in the world still in operation.
@ThirrinDiamond
@ThirrinDiamond Рік тому
rip enki, can't escape his shame even thousands of years later
@ExtraThiccc
@ExtraThiccc Рік тому
I love how the stronger the beer is, the objectively better it gets. Wonder what they would call wine, "excellent beer"?
@NigelHatcherN
@NigelHatcherN Місяць тому
You can make beer/wine to the same strength, it depends on the yeast.
@Mysterialic
@Mysterialic Рік тому
Man discovered beer and made the entire civilisation revolve around it.
@TastingHistory
@TastingHistory Рік тому
A man of culture 🍺
@scaper8
@scaper8 Рік тому
No joke, most anthropologists are pretty sure that agriculture developed not to have reliable sources of grain for bread, but reliable sources of grain for beer. Civilization was literally founded so that we could more consistently get sloshed.
@kaitlyn__L
@kaitlyn__L Рік тому
@@scaper8 makes sense. I mean, given food was actually fairly plentiful (albeit seasonal) for most nomadic peoples, and it involved less hard labour, “come on and you can replace your venison with monotonous food slabs” isn’t a particularly compelling reason to settle down. But given alcohol would’ve been hard to come by (albeit not impossible, plenty of nomadic cultures had alcohol like the Mongolians’ alcoholic milk, but it was still rare) reliably, “come on and you can get drunk EVERY night” may very well have been appealing enough!
@LAkadian
@LAkadian Рік тому
​@@TastingHistory I hear the beer was quite cultured as well.
@whatabouttheearth
@whatabouttheearth Рік тому
If you think about it, alcohol was invented first (apx 6,500 bc) than humans invented the wheel (4000 bc) and writing (earliest known writing apx 3400 bc). But findings at Gobleki Tepe have pottery that they think held beer around 7000 bc.
@zypity
@zypity Рік тому
I'm sure you know, but regarding sweetness, you have to keep in mind that we are used to incredibly sweet foods in comparison to them. So that may skew our perception of "sweet" in relation to the foods and drinks of those days.
@alexnoman1498
@alexnoman1498 Рік тому
Have you tried date sirup? It's so sweet, a half teaspoon is enough to sweeten a whole cup of milk. They knew how to distill something to way above 60% sugar.
@toastedt140
@toastedt140 Рік тому
@alexnoman1498 yes but their taste buds were still less accustomed to sugar. Everything in America, South America, Parts of Europe and Asia is made with added sugar. We add raw sugar to our bread, drinks, dairy, snack foods. If you eat raw fruit/vegetables and lean meat for a while then try anything processed it's way too sweet.
@mimiisrofl
@mimiisrofl Рік тому
@@toastedt140 “processed” lol Ancient Mesopotamian beer is “processed,” that’s a meaningless woo term.
@MrArthoz
@MrArthoz Рік тому
@@alexnoman1498 maybe they added the sweetener afterwards because the distillation process itself is basically turning "sugar" into alcohol. So if we want to sweeten the drink, best add sugar just before drinking it so that it have no time to be further fermented. Adding before or during the distillation process would only serve to increase the alcohol content making it a "very good" beer.
@theodorekorehonen
@theodorekorehonen Рік тому
Yeah the only way to have a sweet alcoholic beverage is to either add a sugar yeast doesn't break down, sweeten it after fermentation, or stop fermentation before the yeast goes through all the sugar
@AbstruseLoL
@AbstruseLoL Рік тому
Max, you're making beautiful work. I love the information paired with your humor and wit. Thanks for the video!
@bigcheesedump490
@bigcheesedump490 Рік тому
Jamie was clearly the star of this episode.
@mikeconroe3328
@mikeconroe3328 5 місяців тому
😂
@mattpowell06
@mattpowell06 Рік тому
Once again I am lured away from my tasks by the Tasting History notification. Like a historical siren song of entertainment but in a good way😅
@TastingHistory
@TastingHistory Рік тому
Come and seeeee 🧜‍♂️
@julietsmith5925
@julietsmith5925 Рік тому
Tasting History is definitely the highlight of my Tuesdays.
@mattpowell06
@mattpowell06 Рік тому
@@julietsmith5925 indisputable fact🙌
@JoanZak
@JoanZak Рік тому
You hit the nail on the head with that comment!!
@ragnkja
@ragnkja Рік тому
A siren song, but at a safe distance from both Scylla and Charybdis.
@tildessmoo
@tildessmoo Рік тому
I love all the references to a happy liver. Some ancient people, including both the Sumerians and the Greeks, thought of the liver as the seat of the soul, so it makes sense, but knowing now that the liver filters poisons, including alcohol, from the blood, and that an excessive amount of alcohol can damage the liver, it comes off as terribly ironic.
@gypsylee333
@gypsylee333 Рік тому
I did not know that!
@littlegrayfishes
@littlegrayfishes Рік тому
ohhh thank you so much for this piece of information. I really wondered whether they knew of the effects alcohol has on the liver when I heard those lyrics. but this makes a lot of sense.
@bacicinvatteneaca
@bacicinvatteneaca Рік тому
I mean, they may also have seen the ruined livers of (the probably rare at the time) alcoholics, and decided that "good in moderation" applied. If a lot of it hurts your liver, a little might just make it happy, y'kno?
@Johannes4233
@Johannes4233 Рік тому
The beer being given to workers was also common in Finland in the 1950s and earlier. The beer drank during the hot summer days on the field was very low alcohol and it was referred to as "after-beer", since it was made from grains that had already been spent on the primary beer making so there was only small amount of fermentable sugars remaining. It still had a lot of flavour though and was considered a nice treat for the people working on the fields.
@jackjackalvarado
@jackjackalvarado Рік тому
Absolutely loved this! I'm doing a lot of research on Mesopotamia and I never even questioned as to why they would use straw. Now it makes so much sense! I hope to see more Sumerian recipes! This was fascinating.
@mounamounayer4818
@mounamounayer4818 Рік тому
Enki and Ishtar getting drunk in the Abzu has to be my favourite part of this story, not least because the word Abzu is still in use today almost unchanged-the abyss. It tickles my fancy that Sumerian words are still floating around in our languages 5000 years later. Thank you Max for rounding off the year with yet another corker of a video! Happy New Year to you and yours.
@kittypost3929
@kittypost3929 Рік тому
I can’t believe this guy has been brewing this beer for 4,000 years that’s dedication
@TastingHistory
@TastingHistory Рік тому
I am very tired 🥱🍻
@AD-kv9kj
@AD-kv9kj Рік тому
Dude, pretty sure they would have simply strained the brew through a cloth filter. Basic stuff. You should use cheesecloth. They may have lived thousands of years ago, but they had cheesecloth equivalents and would not have wanted that much sediment in their beer anymore than we would. Guaranteed they would have strained most of that gunk out. They then quite likely stored it in aged and seasoned clay jars.
@DarkMuj
@DarkMuj Рік тому
one of the best episodes yet! i love this channel so much
@alexissjc409
@alexissjc409 Рік тому
I love how the sumerians would just drink beer from a large vase and just drink it through giant reed bendy straws. I just love that.
@TastingHistory
@TastingHistory Рік тому
Crazy straws when
@CrizzyEyes
@CrizzyEyes Рік тому
It's like a hookah but with drinking beer.
@lairdcummings9092
@lairdcummings9092 Рік тому
Sippy cups for beer...
@MikeHesk742
@MikeHesk742 Рік тому
@@CrizzyEyes that was my first thought too
@danielbrunner5878
@danielbrunner5878 Рік тому
If you take to long to drink it could serve well in your garden compost
@evilcow666
@evilcow666 Рік тому
I love how max constantly tries to assure us that he is not an alcoholic.
@TastingHistory
@TastingHistory Рік тому
Promise 🤞
@conradnelson5283
@conradnelson5283 11 місяців тому
I love the story of Sumeria. There may have been other civilizations first, but this is the first one that we have written histories of. Their mythology is fascinating. Familiar yet alien. Great video.
@Ricardojmsl
@Ricardojmsl 11 місяців тому
More than deserved sub. so good, not just to know how it´s done and how good food and drink is, but also the history. i´m a fan.
@lumikkihusu7259
@lumikkihusu7259 Рік тому
The time you take in the malt roasting process (the bit with the oven) and the exact temperature you use will affect the taste hugely! Make good notes on this if you want to try to replicate the same result later. Of course, the variety of barley is a factor, too. In modern brewing, The basic malts are fairly simple just as described here. Such lighter malt also "has a high diastatic value" meaning that the grain itself contains the enzymes needed to unlock the goodness within for the yeast to transform into alcohol. Many beer recipes require several different types of malt. The ones that have been roasted for longer and/or hotter will give different aromas but be less efficient in the conversion. Therefore: Use the light stuff as a base to give off the extra enzymes needed to catch the full value of the smaller amount of those darker roasted flavour goodies. Also: If you accidentally roast your grain too much, expect problems in the fermentation phase. This would have happened to the Sumerians as well. Adding a lot of syrup will help save the brew but might actually result in a braggot instead. (Malt flavouread mead, that is.)
@WabacControl
@WabacControl Рік тому
Spot on. We need active enzymes from the malt in order to break the starches from the barley flour and the 'bread' into fermentable and non-fermentable sugars for both alcohol and body / flavour.
@xmuzel
@xmuzel Рік тому
Thanks for mentioning that!
@matthewcox431
@matthewcox431 Рік тому
Take notes from The Boys of Sumer. 😁
@cosmicman621
@cosmicman621 Рік тому
...might not take up,home-brewing,after all 😳
@GeckoHiker
@GeckoHiker Рік тому
@@cosmicman621 Kits are a very good place to start homebrewing. If you want to experiment with malting you can always try that later. I stick to kits because it's fun to brew my own IPAs and mostly foolproof. You can get grain kits or extract kits. My neighbor and I enjoy brewing with all grain kits because we use the spent grains to bake bread and feed the chickens. The best part of homebrewing is to drink a beer while taking turns stirring the cauldron.
@verdecillo9940
@verdecillo9940 Рік тому
I tried to make this recipe and I cannot overstate the importance of the guard dog- I thought I would be ok without it, but those damn potentates came and stole all my barley!
@joshuakuehn
@joshuakuehn Рік тому
🤣🤣🤣
@danf4447
@danf4447 Рік тому
the guard dog drank all my beer :( by Enki i will have my revenge!
@TheWolfsnack
@TheWolfsnack Рік тому
I have no fear....I have three large standard poodles....potentates tend to stay away from anything smarter than themselves....
@irwintatyana9066
@irwintatyana9066 11 місяців тому
hi i'm originally from Caucasus we do make that Bear the Best ever So The bappir bread is ( suharry) yeast dour bread baked in Oven until golden brown ! Most important Water should not have chlorine , If you put YEAST it will eat all sweet of all Dates ! yeast east sugar all the time !Syrups are add before drinking and use Distilled water if you do not have Natural alps waters so, know more if you are interested!
@VioletCatastrophe
@VioletCatastrophe Рік тому
I've been making an incremental game and I've been trying to avoid anachronisms where possible, so this has been part of my agriculture rabbit hole of early beer and bread. I love stuff like this, and seeing the core ideas that more modern and refined recipes evolved into.
@LenaVoices
@LenaVoices Рік тому
Hey Max I know you might not see it but I want to say how grateful I am for the show! I'm taking a lot of Greek/Roman classes in Uni right now and learning a bit here also makes me smile. I've been watching the show since EP 1 and I'm so happy to see how it's grown. It makes me feel a little less alone, thank you Max!
@TastingHistory
@TastingHistory Рік тому
Episode 1! Thank you for the near 3 years of me babbling. Good luck on your studies 😄
@giraffelord94
@giraffelord94 Рік тому
I love that story of Inanna and Enki with the drinking contest and hangover, because it shows on deep yet simple level people have always been the same.
@unnecessarilyepic1107
@unnecessarilyepic1107 Рік тому
Fellow OSP fan?
@gregoryambres1897
@gregoryambres1897 Рік тому
Your perfect content and excellent sense of humor make your posts delightul and always something new to discover, fascinating and entertaining in the meanwhile. AND we get awesome, classical recipes that no one would ever get anywhere else. You rock, Max. We love you.
@St0rmTheGates
@St0rmTheGates Рік тому
Awesome video. Love your format. Keep up the good work :)
@susanapplegate9758
@susanapplegate9758 Рік тому
Anyone who makes me laugh out loud as often as you do, Max, is pretty awesome in my book. Another fun one, hope you and yours have a lovely New Years!
@TastingHistory
@TastingHistory Рік тому
Back at ya Susan 🎉
@bigred9428
@bigred9428 Рік тому
I gave him a thumbs up the second I saw that graphic in the beginning.
@didisinclair3605
@didisinclair3605 Рік тому
I always get a couple of big out loud laughs from Max... so delightful!!!
@aluhans2636
@aluhans2636 Рік тому
As a german I am very proud of your pronunciation of the word ''Hefeweizen''! I'm in a dark spot of my life currently, but this cheered me up. Thanks
@erzsebetkovacs2527
@erzsebetkovacs2527 Рік тому
Wishing the best to you, whatever it is that you are currently experiencing.
@aluhans2636
@aluhans2636 Рік тому
@@erzsebetkovacs2527 thank you!
@redtobertshateshandles
@redtobertshateshandles Рік тому
You are just thinking the wurst.
@GanarfGeorgie
@GanarfGeorgie Рік тому
Just remember that, no matter what you are going through, you are loved, my friend.
@pegmay7209
@pegmay7209 Рік тому
I hope things are better for you, two months on. I too went through a dark period within the past few months and I wish there was more I could do to help. All I can do is say you’re not alone.
@dicedoomkid
@dicedoomkid 3 місяці тому
These videos are just so chill, dude got smarts and food. Very nice 👌🏼
@matheusmotta1132
@matheusmotta1132 Рік тому
Amazing channel! Loved your presentation and sense of humor, just subscribed!
@kkleparek01
@kkleparek01 Рік тому
Thanks for the birthday present! I'm a homebrewer and my wife and I are big fans of the show; we always look forward to new episodes on Tuesday evenings. Last night was also my birthday and the beer theme was perfect. Thanks again!
@dannylo5875
@dannylo5875 Рік тому
You should make Sumerian whisky
@zarahandrahilde9554
@zarahandrahilde9554 Рік тому
Dude thats super wholesome, i want that life! Cheers to you and your wife and a late happy bday to you!
@jabberman3000
@jabberman3000 Рік тому
Day 1: Soak 1 cup of barley Day 2: mix together 3 cups flour, 1 cup water and 1 tablespoon of yeast. Mix into dough and cover. Drain barley, wrap in cheese cloth and hang for 2-3 days. Spraying with water as needed to keep slightly moist Day 3: shape dough and leave it to dry out Day 4: bake barley at 200f for 2-3 hours until nicely brown and aromatic Day 5: crush barely into a powder, cover with water and let soak for 1-2 hours. Meanwhile break up the bread and let dry out. Afterwards put the bread in a large container with the barely mixture. Put in spices and syrup. Stir mixture then pour in water. Cover with a cheese cloth and leave it in a dark place for 2 days
@MrSagaTeller
@MrSagaTeller Рік тому
Thank you. Not all of heroes wear capes.
@thebeardedjohn
@thebeardedjohn Рік тому
And before this make your own sourdough bread
@jacobluco7076
@jacobluco7076 Рік тому
It makes me mad that he spent all that time malting the barley, and didn't even mash in with hot water! Why malt it if you don't want to convert it to sugar?
@Sneakyboson
@Sneakyboson Рік тому
You forgot the day where you pray to ninkasi.
@theotherohlourdespadua1131
@theotherohlourdespadua1131 11 місяців тому
​@@jacobluco7076 The Hymn of Ninkasi didn't say anything about that...
@jesuslovesyou8404
@jesuslovesyou8404 11 місяців тому
This is the most entertaining thing I’ve seen on the internet this year. Thank you!
@IamtheLunchlady
@IamtheLunchlady Рік тому
My husband and I watch your show before bed. It's our bedtime routine now lol. Just so much fun and very informative.
@nyarparablepsis872
@nyarparablepsis872 Рік тому
It's my birthday and I'm a Sumerologist. I'll take this as a wonderful present and thank you for it! Just recently dug into the Presargonic beer "recipes", particularly into dark beers created with torrefied malt. As for "the more I read about beer in ancient Mesopotamia, the less I knew about beer in ancient Mesopotamia": I think that's intended. At least I felt exactly like that as well.
@maplebones
@maplebones Рік тому
If someone wants to read about, and understand beer making in Mesopotamia or anywhere else, they need a basic understanding of what beer is, as a reference. The failure to comprehend was not a conspiracy .
@Michalosnup
@Michalosnup Рік тому
Have you tried to make some beer yourself? If so, how did it turn out?
@gandalf8216
@gandalf8216 Рік тому
I tried brewing beer using wild yeast many times, and it's very random how it ends up. Sourdough makes sense. My favorite yeast for brewing comes from orchards, from the skin of apples just about to "rot". They are great at breaking down fructose, and produce very little unwanted waste products. Yeast collecting is incredibly fascinating and interesting in the context of baking and brewing.
@lairdcummings9092
@lairdcummings9092 Рік тому
Now that you've teased us, make a vid series on the collecting of yeast! I'd watch that.
@gandalf8216
@gandalf8216 Рік тому
@@lairdcummings9092 It's not much to it. You collect samples from places, you put them in vials, you grow sample populations at home from these vials,then going through a sequence of tests. This is the expensive part, it's difficult to analyze byproduct amounts and of which kind, so you hire a company that does chemical analysis. If a species/strain is interesting, but with minor flaws or issues, you can try to breed it out of them. Then you keep them dormant, before using them as starters. For consistency in a brewery, you use one starter per recipe, and you stick with that starter for every batch of beer. A video would have a duration of about 40seconds of nothing interesting happening.
@royalladybug30
@royalladybug30 Рік тому
Your username is perfect for that conversation!
@randoanon4785
@randoanon4785 Рік тому
So that’s why there’s the belief from back in ye olden dayse that bread dough would rise faster and better if left under an apple tree. The dough would get a yeast boost from the apples!
@erzsebetkovacs2527
@erzsebetkovacs2527 Рік тому
Thank you for the apple tip. Do you have experience with using grapes or raisins for the purpose?
@acgorrell
@acgorrell 8 місяців тому
I've often wondered why food and culinary history isn't more popular among academics, especially when we have people like you absolutely killing it in the genre. Also, I'm totally "stealing" some of your videos for my world history class.
@Dayman667
@Dayman667 Рік тому
This is an excellent video, as informative as it is instructional. Good work my dude.
@4.0.4
@4.0.4 Рік тому
Love the comparison of learning to make a cake from a children's song. It also raises the question of how many recipes change, emerge, and fall out of fashion in the centuries between one and another artifact.
@tomseaman1108
@tomseaman1108 Рік тому
Love your channel. I am a retired history teacher. As a student, and later a teacher, I was always curious about the lives of common people. You give great insights that are very rare. Keep up the good work!
@cdreid9999
@cdreid9999 Рік тому
there are several historians on youtube who covers this. it has always annoyed me hoe historians only seemed to care about the elite. im far more interested in the commoners lives
@MyName-tb9oz
@MyName-tb9oz Рік тому
@@cdreid9999, it's really not so much that historians only care about the elites. It's more that there is so little information about the lives of the common people that learning anything is exceedingly difficult. The commoners weren't writing books, were they? They didn't have the time or, likely, inclination. The nobility wrote and they wrote about the things that concerned them: The nobility. The peasants were just peasants and, as long as they kept working, no one cared how they lived. Don't blame a lack of interest on the part of modern historians for the lack of information about the lives of the common people. Blame the lack of sources of information. Read some history and you'll find that modern historians are at least as annoyed about the lack of information about the lives of the common people as you are.
@slaapliedje
@slaapliedje Рік тому
The great thing about the Sumerians, and why we know so much about the commoners is that they had great percentage of literacy, and many stone tablets or cylinders were found detailing more minor things in society, such as land deeds, contracts, receipts, etc.
@narveenaryaputri9759
@narveenaryaputri9759 Рік тому
Absolutely delightful video! You have done such indepth research and I love your way of presenting it. I have never tried making beer, but I had thought it was always with Hops.. Ha.. how little I know!
@WaywardBastards
@WaywardBastards Рік тому
You are as epic as the history you teach us , love every video
@hanadia2053
@hanadia2053 Рік тому
The way Habesha (Eritrean and Ethiopian people) brew traditional beer might hold a few clues if you're interested. We have something called Ye Tella Kitta, Tella being the beer, Kitta meaning flatbread, it's similar in appearance and purpose as Bappir. And for aromatics we use Gesho, which is plant from the Rhamnus spp., it makes the beer slightly bitter like hops.
@mrsean1999
@mrsean1999 Рік тому
Are these beers ever bottled ? Or only made at home? Now I want to go to a good Ethiopian restaurant to try this!
@hanadia2053
@hanadia2053 Рік тому
@@mrsean1999 Usually home brew, so there are loads of variations. There is some cottage industry selling them for immediate consumption and that beer is strong on alcohol and maltiness. Wedding l or religious festivity brews, laced with honey or pure, are where it's at. Enjoy if you find a restaurant that sells the good stuff
@user-su3bb5gn4l
@user-su3bb5gn4l День тому
Our mqombothi is still prepared the same way by using sorghum as a fermenting agent .To complete the process it's mixed with well cooked starchy powdered grains...this formula is popular all over the african continent 😂
@jelkel25
@jelkel25 Рік тому
Always wondered about the ancient beer drunk through the big straw's, they always look like they're having a great old time of it in the little pictures. Now I know why!!!!
@cccaaa9034
@cccaaa9034 8 місяців тому
Bumper sticker: "Don't give up the keys to civilization, drink responsibly." -Enki
@Sam-nc9cy
@Sam-nc9cy 17 днів тому
😂nice one
@HoJu1989
@HoJu1989 Рік тому
I once made some Neolithic-inspired beer for a course on experimental archaeology in college. We failed to malt our own grain (couldn't get it to sprout because we bought it pre-toasted by mistake), so we visited a local brewery and they kindly gave as some malt (and a tour!). Instead of date syrup, we used honey to stimulate alcohol production, based on remains found in Spanish Neolithic sites. The accuracy of the procedure and our data collection were scientifically spotty, but it turned out fairly drinkable and we got to drink beer in class. For science!
@andreagriffiths3512
@andreagriffiths3512 Рік тому
For Science! 🍻
@dankpepe2110
@dankpepe2110 Рік тому
Science bich! 🍻
@mikkoleinonen9846
@mikkoleinonen9846 Рік тому
I have to say that many small breweries gladly give tours to people. I've been learning to make some some Sahti, an ancient Finnish beer, and went to a local brewery that sold the right kind of malts and all. They gave me a tour and gave me tips on what kind of equipment to buy (turns out I would have gotten way too expensive equipment for a beer that you can basically make with a pot and a bucket :D)
@HappyBeezerStudios
@HappyBeezerStudios Рік тому
I could totally see honey being used. And pretty wild yeasts from whatever fruit and/or grains you throw in there. From berries to barley, einkorn, emmer, grapes
@msx94
@msx94 Рік тому
It's not neolithic it's antique
@benjamindavenport1857
@benjamindavenport1857 Рік тому
You may already know this, but Dogfish Head has a series called 'ancient ales', of which Midas Touch is the most famous/popular, based on ancient beer recipes (with the advice of archaeologists). Could be a fun episode to explore a few of those - bonus points if you could somehow got them to do a series with you!
@occamraiser
@occamraiser 5 місяців тому
Most interesting - and very well presented - Thank you.
@ikarus2h
@ikarus2h Рік тому
How did they know that alcohol and the liver have a relationship
@ashtonjones9503
@ashtonjones9503 Рік тому
Makes you wonder. How many times as humans we've discovered, lost and rediscovered our collective knowledge. Especially the amount of knowledge lost at the Great Library of Alexandria. I have this odd hunch that that Library held the key to unlocking so many mysteries.
@Matteus733
@Matteus733 Рік тому
@@ashtonjones9503 spot on… also how much is contained in the papal library away from the world
@kalinmir
@kalinmir Рік тому
they didn't...do not read your current awareness into ancient cultures expressions
@gdgyhgrd
@gdgyhgrd Рік тому
@@ashtonjones9503 The Library of Alexandria had largely declined into scholarly insignificance by the time of its destruction and most of the important documents that had been stored there had long since been removed to other libraries or copied.
@Matteus733
@Matteus733 Рік тому
@@gdgyhgrd exactly and the no 1 contender for the left overs? Papacy
@strangeaslife
@strangeaslife Рік тому
I'm laughing way too hard at the patty cake bit 🤣
@violetdreams1799
@violetdreams1799 Рік тому
that's great 🤣 love Max's wit!
@g.3581
@g.3581 Рік тому
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
@vigilantcosmicpenguin8721
@vigilantcosmicpenguin8721 Рік тому
It was seriously a pretty good metaphor.
@sizer99
@sizer99 9 місяців тому
Very fun video, especially the poems - a couple things: 1) a lot of brewers use mostly wet yeast, but dry yeast cake was common in a lot of places too up to the last century, like Scandinavia where the kveik might be stored wet or dry. Wet is better if you brew a lot, dry stores better over long times. But a lot of it is just 'this is how my granddad did it'. 2) The date syrup didn't make your beer sweet because the yeast turns (almost) any sugar into alcohol, and it's voracious. Like you said you could add it just before drinking, or add a ton more up front (which will also make it a lot more alcoholic). 3) It's not sour because you didn't get any lactobacillus in there. Sour (as opposed to bitter) beers come from wild yeasts or bacteria, or adding sour fruit. 4) For modern beers we generally ferment 2-3 weeks (longer for hugely strong ones), and as long as your yeast is still bubbling you can let it keep fermenting. But we ferment at lower temperatures than you were here, which makes it take longer. And of course we add hops, which help preserve the beer - your beer didn't have that, which is why it needs to be drunk fairly soon before bacteria goes to town on it. Back in colonial US times, it was often the job of the wife to make house beer, and she would make it like this: Take some bread, crumble it in a jug. Add one raw egg. Flavor as desired. Add a little yeast. Fill the jug to near the top with water. Stir. Cover with cloth. Let it sit for 2 days and 'it will be fyne'. The stuff you made here is luxurious in comparison, but I guess the best beer is whatever beer you have!
@sandraeggerstedt7930
@sandraeggerstedt7930 9 місяців тому
Cool! I love how you pronounce the ancient languages! What a hoot. You are so fun to watch. The recipes are amazing, the history, one of my favorite parts, and cooking, another favorite! What can I say? I love this show❣️
@laerethian1
@laerethian1 Рік тому
Great video! From a brewer and (ex) archaeologist point of view, I really appreciated this! I would add that since ancient ovens for baking malt were wood ovens, there is almost the certainty that the beers were "smoked" in flavor, and probably on the darkish side of color (since it was very hard to keep a steady temperature during the malting process, so most grains would get more torrified than expected). This is at least what used to happen in pre-industrial beers, so the guess is that it also applied to ancient ones.
@lukesmith9455
@lukesmith9455 Рік тому
Being sour or not is mostly just down to the yeast. If you used a wild yeast (whatever was in the environment) then there's a chance it comes out sour, which is sometimes desired. If you added a store bought yeast to it it almost certainly won't be. Yeast is really important to the flavor of beer, and the way this was controlled before we knew really what yeast was is they used the same wooden stirring utensils which would have the yeast from the previous batch on it. Protecting that was important, and it'd make for another good video to see how that was done throughout history, as beer brewing is one of the most important and common things humans do.
@comradewindowsill4253
@comradewindowsill4253 Рік тому
could well be on the vats too. That's how it works for soy sauces, which are also fermented products, with their own specific yeast lines. The sauce is made in the same vat for centuries, and the yeast lives on the vat walls.
@jannuzijannuzicharlescharl3260
@jannuzijannuzicharlescharl3260 Місяць тому
I like how you carefully and plausibly reconstruct recipes and then just get on with it. Very interesting.
@antonydiniz345
@antonydiniz345 Рік тому
That's so dope, man... congrats for all that work, it's very amusing...
@kurtlindner
@kurtlindner Рік тому
8:32 Jamie: "...I don't know what potentates are. That's what they serve in school cafeterias, right?" This episode would've been a perfect collaboration with How To Make Everything (I'm pretty sure Andy passed this milestone since the reset).
@mary-janereallynotsarah684
@mary-janereallynotsarah684 Рік тому
Potentate famine ravaged Ireland.
@jakeaurod
@jakeaurod Рік тому
Boil 'em, mash 'em, stick 'em in a stew, Po-Ten-Tates!
@hakanolausson1367
@hakanolausson1367 Рік тому
The lack of sweetness from the date syrup may be due to the sugar having been fermented into alcohol. If one adds, for example, raspberries to a batch of beer that is fermenting then the resulting beer gets more sour (level of sourness depending on the amount of berries, but a good sourness) because the sugars are fermented but the sourness of the raspberries is still intact.
@user-dw1xx3gf8z
@user-dw1xx3gf8z 11 місяців тому
Man this video is a gem i learned a lot thanks
@Lorena-kr9gf
@Lorena-kr9gf Місяць тому
I just found this channel I love it ! Thank you 😊 ❤
@chitoryu12
@chitoryu12 Рік тому
It’s likely that the bappir was not actually raw inside to use as the yeast starter, as there’s records of it being stored in warehouses. The yeast would probably come from the solid remnants of fermentation left over from a previous batch. A lot of bad reenactor recipes leave the dough too raw and make it sour.
@-jank-willson
@-jank-willson Рік тому
So what do you think bappir is?
@HappyBeezerStudios
@HappyBeezerStudios Рік тому
@@-jank-willson Maybe something like modern store bought yeast. Which comes either as dry flakes or in some sort of concentrated dough. Maybe collecting the small pieces that are stuck on fingers and in pots when making bread, collected, dried, used for beer later.
@Zzyzzyzzs
@Zzyzzyzzs Рік тому
@@-jank-willson As they say, the solid remnants of fermentation left over from a previous batch, which I imagine could just be transferred from vat to vat if you have an established industrial brewing facility, or be dried and baked into a cake for transport further afield. Barm, the yeasty foam that forms on top of beer during fermentation, is also a possibility. Many alemakers still use that.
@lynngrant1318
@lynngrant1318 Рік тому
Many years ago Readers Digest had an article that spoke of the ancient beer recipe. A professional brewer was at an archeology conference and realized what it was. He went on to make the beer and documented his journey. It’s worth a read.
@MrPaul985
@MrPaul985 Рік тому
A couple cousins of mine and I have been getting into beer brewing lately, I can’t wait to to show them this as my suggestion for next month’s batch. We make 5gal a batch though so we’ll have to see how it does scaling up.
@hjelsethak
@hjelsethak Рік тому
Dude, you deserve sooooooooooooooooooooooooooo many more subscribers. Your content is fresh as hell, given your sources. Which I hope you take as a compliment. ;)
@IskarJarek
@IskarJarek Рік тому
Was hoping for a post credits scene of max passed out in the kitchen, with jamie trying to wake him up.
@vigilantcosmicpenguin8721
@vigilantcosmicpenguin8721 Рік тому
A post-credits scene of Max accidentally giving the secrets of civilization to the cat
@TTFerdinand
@TTFerdinand Рік тому
@@vigilantcosmicpenguin8721 After finishing that beer he probably did, but Men In Black showed up before he could upload any of it.
@cameronansley7950
@cameronansley7950 Рік тому
Haha that would be funny. And declaring his undying love to the stove.
@Anesthesia069
@Anesthesia069 Рік тому
The bappir/yeast issue has long confused me as well. I settled on the beer being a kind of kvass, where the bappir is a hard, twice-baked bread and the yeast comes from the wine they mention Ninkasi adding (much like a bottle-conditioned modern beer). But I like this take as well. Did Tate mention any preference for the yeast source? I can confirm natural yeast can come from dates. I have created a recipe for ancient Egyptian bread where, based on discussion in a few papers, I used date yeast water as a leaven.
@graceygrumble
@graceygrumble Місяць тому
This was so interesting and fun. Cheers!
@aplcidr
@aplcidr Рік тому
Really appreciate the effort you put into the sumerian orthography during that drinking song!
@memunns
@memunns Рік тому
I tried making this but forgot getting a guard dog and some potentates stole my beer!
@Bunniesan
@Bunniesan Рік тому
Oh man this just unlocked memories. One of my friends was the research assistant of the archaeobotanist professor while we were at university and they spent the semester running experiments trying to perfect this recipe. By the end of the semester, he gave us a few bottles to try and they were indeed incredibly sour, but I liked it. I think definitely got the batch without the date syrup 😂
@vigilantcosmicpenguin8721
@vigilantcosmicpenguin8721 Рік тому
I'm imagining them coming to a party that's BYOB, and showing up with an ancient clay vessel.
@pizzzaeater1425
@pizzzaeater1425 Рік тому
@@vigilantcosmicpenguin8721 idk about anyone else but someone showing up to a party with clay pots of old-world-style alcohol would would get me SO hyped lol
@erzsebetkovacs2527
@erzsebetkovacs2527 Рік тому
Which university was this again?
@micksbiggestfan4006
@micksbiggestfan4006 Рік тому
I visited the Anchor Steam Brewery, S.F, CA. U.S.A. Back in the early 90's. They had a presentation on this very beer. Or one just like it. I remember having to poke a straw through the crust that formed on the top. It was like drinking wet sand.🤭Packed a punch though. Enjoyed this, Thanks for sharing.
@aleh3627
@aleh3627 Рік тому
Great episode! Love sumerian recipes and history!
@veridico84
@veridico84 Рік тому
As a beer maker, this is really cool to watch. You should cook your mash at 60°C odd, to extract the sugars for fermentation.
@theotherohlourdespadua1131
@theotherohlourdespadua1131 Рік тому
That process wouldn't be widespread until the New Kingdom of Egypt era with their own brewing industry. Until then, what you see in the video is how the first beer was made...
@veridico84
@veridico84 Рік тому
@@theotherohlourdespadua1131 Thank you, I never knew that.
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